She

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Oh what fun! The intestine of a 23 year old girl has been dug out
of her abdomen with a metal rod. It has been thrust in and out of her vagina so
many times in a feat of sexual excitement and delight that a ‘rope like thing’
had come out from her insides, one of the gang-members said. Well, it was
absurdly enough, her intestines. Now the girl is dying and even if she is made
to survive somehow, she would never be able to eat again except through
intra-venous means. And the stupid girl still went on to say, as her brother
had told a daily, “Mother, I want to live!” Ah, the comedy of it all, the sheer
fun!

Now masculinity can cheer again. The rod has done what the phallus
could not.

Sometimes I really do not know whom to feel sorry for— the women,
or the unfinished and unrealized project of patriarchy. The project started
off quite well, actually. For generations, patriarchy was successful in carving
out a niche for its invincible power-status in all possible spheres of life. It
was a skilled process of inculcating patriarchal values inside humankind in
order to control and regulate any opposition that might come in the way. That
is why husbands would carry on marital rape at ease, mother-in-laws would find
satisfaction in harassing their daughter-in-laws, and even mothers would feel
it natural to inflict upon their daughters, the same shackles that she had
inherited from history. But then slowly, the times changed. Female foeticide
was prohibited. Marrying off daughters before eighteen was made illegal.
Property laws were reformed. Education increased. Women went to work. Women got
money. Women were given a voice and taught to use it. It was a terrible time.
Men felt wronged. They had expected much, much more from patriarchy. It was as
if the son has been disinherited from his ancestral home. With patriarchy
failing to guard its power motives anymore, men decided to come into the open
and establish their position of the penis-holder themselves. So they decided to
perform exemplary violence in order to scare women. Unlike the beautifully
shrewd system of patriarchy which had realized the effectiveness of
manipulation and diplomacy in this changed social scenario, the stupid men got
impatient and bloody. Biting of flesh, cutting off of breasts, scooping out
insides of women through their vaginal opening etc. became their ridiculous
modus operandi.

But really, dear men, it’s okay to be a man. Even in this world!
Please do realize that you are not lagging behind in every sphere of life!
Girls wearing mini-skirts, or the women you call Feminists, wearing ethnic kurtis
and big bindis and arguing all the time are still not as threatening and
powerful as you imagine them to be. They are almost as much objectified and
kind of helpless right now as they were before, only in a different garb. The
female reservations, the divorce laws, the emancipation of women, they are all
meant for you guys, stupid! Don’t you see what patriarchy is doing? It’s
increasing complicity in your fellow women so that they feel satiated and
pacified enough to stop resistance. So please try to realize that you are still
being kept in a dominating position by patriarchy. Don’t feel so scared of
women as to attack, rape and kill them. Always remember, that complicity of
these women is your greatest weapon, not their violation and death. You
shouldn’t be giving that up in exchange for some silly fear-libido-animosity
induced vagina-digging violence. Help patriarchy in maintaining its updated
strategies, don’t be a spoilsport and demand the blatant power-exhibition
enjoyed by your fore-fathers. They are outdated and useless in the current
socio-political situation.

Stop affirming and re-affirming your sense of masculinity like
this, men! We anyway believe that you do have the magic wand called The
Penis. And still, when you try to prove that repeatedly by violating and
destroying a woman’s being, it just goes on to show how utterly unsure you are
of your masculinity to yourself. Don’t make the people laugh at your insecurity
and beat you to death at the same time. Have some faith in the project of
patriarchy. It is unfinished but still on. Cooperate and help to move it
forward. Take off your profile photos from Facebook for a while. Join protest
marches. Write fierce Twitter messages and blogposts asking for death penalty
and castration. You might be mentally undressing and having sex with every
woman you see. You might be vigorously supporting the decency-indecency
dichotomy associated with women. You might even be hurling obscene comments on
passing women for fun. But please take care to show your outrage at this rape
incident. Take care to sensitize people around you through social networking
websites, adda sessions and candle-light vigils. Do all what you
possibly can till this news, like every other, finally loses its importance and
is cast into oblivion by the media. This is what happens. This is what will
always happen.

All you have to do is be a little patient. Society has already started
hating and laughing at your impatience. If you don’t try hard enough, why, you might
as well risk being looked upon as that poor, virtually castrated, emasculated
sex that uses violence as weapon for the lack of a real phallus.

Friday, December 16, 2011

One of my friends, Sneha,
called me up today and related to me how she and her boyfriend had a narrow
escape while passing by the Birla Mandir area in Kolkata yesterday evening. There
were a couple of guys, she said, who passed some comments on Sneha’s body
hugging sweater and even tried to grope her up in front of her boyfriend. They had
to run to prevent further molestation. The problem of eve-teasing is growing
day by day in Kolkata, Sneha said, and I couldn’t agree more. A glimpse at any
regular newspaper, and cases of eve-teasing and physical harassment of women are
sure to appear at some corner or the other. It’s a little strange I feel, since
people nowadays have greater access to all kinds of pornography which accounts
for the release of much of their pent up sexual energy. Logically, this should lead to a
decrease in the rate of sexual abuse of women by men in the streets. But reality
tells us otherwise. In this age of open sexuality and independence, women still
encounter unwanted trespassing on their bodies. But why?

This question reminded me of
one such incident that I myself had faced about a year ago near the Jadavpur
Police Station area, Kolkata. It was about five in the evening but already
quite dark as winter was about to step into the city. Most of my friends had
already left the University, but I was late since I had some library work to do
for an upcoming exam. After collecting the necessary study material, I packed
my bag and started walking towards the bus-stop which was just five minutes
away. And then it happened. A group of young men, sitting on parts of a broken
wall started approaching me. I was taken aback. They weren’t familiar faces and
their motive seemed sinister. They exchanged dirty smiles among each other and
stared at my bosom like wild dogs lusting for meat. I wore a normal kurti and
jeans. So the crap that women ‘provoke’ men to launch into animalistic behavior was
out of the question. I bent my head pretending to ignore them and walked a pace
or two again. They followed. I began to feel helpless now. It was quite dark and
very few people were around. Moreover, we were so well guarded by random trees
that it was very difficult for me to draw attention to any passing vehicle from
there. So there was no point shouting for help, I realized. The men had
realized that too, I guess, because they gradually started cornering me. They were
no longer quiet. Frequent references to my breasts and hips were being made in
the crudest possible language.

“Maal tar mai dekhechhis? Puro
dairy farm, mairi!”

(“Just look at her boobies! A whole
dairy farm, eh?”)

Suddenly, anger struck me. A surge
of rage engulfed my fear, my anxiety. For a moment, I became oblivious of the
danger of it all and shouted back,

(“Bloody bastards, sons of a
bitch! If your dick is so big, why don’t you dodge your father and then fuck
your own mother instead?”)

I had barely realized what I had
just said when the men started staring at me again, no not at my ‘assets’ this
time, but at my face. I didn’t know what they thought or felt. They just kept standing
dumbstruck, as if each of them had been actually rooted to that particular
spot. I didn’t wait any more and walked straight away from the place with long
steps.

When I had reached the
bus-stop, I was still fuming. My throat felt dry and soar with all that
unexpected shouting coming forth from within without a warning. But a sense of
satisfaction slowly calmed me down. I did it!! My tongue did the trick. It was
not merely an escape, but also a victory! It was the best feeling in this whole
world. It was as if I had answered back the trespassers on behalf of the entire
womankind. I felt proud of myself for being able to protect my own body without
any external help. In fact, that experience taught me that it doesn’t take a
phenomenal woman to raise a voice of protest, any Mina, Sneha or Rachita can do
it. Those filthy eve teasers are so used to associating women with fear,
helplessness and fleeing that it never occurs to them that we are as much alive
as they are and can bite back if needed. I believe it’s high time that we make
such sick men realize that any form of sexual abuse, be it raping or eve
teasing, would no longer be shushed. We can, and we will pay them back in their
own coins. No social role-playing can hold us back. It is sad but true that there
are still some people, many of them women themselves, who claim that the
responsibility for sexual violation ultimately rests with the woman herself. She
must have provoked the men with her titillating mannerisms and revealing outfits. This
double standard must be stopped. What nonsense is this? Do we women jump at men
who walk around in shorts? Do we try to gang-rape men who swim in a one piece
swim-suit?

When I told Sneha about that
incident today, she was shocked as well. “Oh god! How could you use such
language! It’s incredible!” she said. I didn’t answer her but in my heart I knew
that if ever I be dragged to the moral court for using indecent language, I would
plead “PROVOKED”.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

She came to us this evening to ask if she could still be of any help, if not as a cook, in any other matter that needs paid service. Maa asked her about her health, as I had already dreaded before and she told us the somewhat-known-before story, yet again. She had to undergo thirty-six stitches, five of which have not yet healed. The doctor has prescribed an expensive painkiller that she cannot afford everyday. Her two-month old little daughter is being starved to death because she herself is too sore to be able to suckle her and too poor to buy milk. Her elder daughter who incidentally happens to be seven years old is carrying out most of the regular work. She is taking cheap iron capsules but the weakness still persists.

We had no work to offer. Another cook has already been appointed in her place, because frankly speaking, we did not expect her alive again. In fact, it still seems pretty unreal that a 32 year old poor woman would survive violent attacks of two able, armed men, one of them her husband himself and stand before us once again, asking for a job. But we had nothing, nothing but charity to help her, and charity she vehemently refused.

“Haramjada jotoi kop maruk go Boudi, meyegulor mukh cheye amar ei gotorer jor ami thik khatate parbo.”[“How much ever blows the bastard showers upon me, I will still be able to work thinking about my daughters.”]

Her husband carried the daa (chopper), she said, and the other man one ansh-bonti (knief). She felt very scared, Malati confessed, but she could not allow herself to die if she had to prevent her daughters from being sold. So she resisted. She shouted and fought. One of her breasts was chopped away. With repeated blows, her stomach bled and bled and bled. Later the doctor commented that her spleen had come out and had she not been hospitalized exactly on time by her neighbours, she must’ve died.

She did not cry as she spoke. But yes, she seemed a little tired. I was thankful that it is winter and that the remnants of Malati were wrapped safely behind her sweater and shawl. I felt for her, but not enough to be able to accept her half-torn, ghastly self. It gave me a strange comfort to see her more or less the same, without the scars of survival. I thanked winter, again.

Malati returned disheartened. All her works were gone in this period of two and half months of hospitalization and she was not yet fit enough to work as a daily labourer in case she failed to find domestic appointments. Maa promised her that she would try to find her work, but Malati was hardly convinced. She had been attacked so that she transfers her own little plot-property in the village to her husband which he can spend in drinking and buying sarees for his kept woman. She simply refused to believe that she might need to sell that plot for livelihood. It was for the future of her daughters, she claimed. An employment… a domestic one, is all that can give her crusade a meaning.

She left with an incomplete sigh, miles to go, I guessed, before she sleeps. After all this struggle, she must not lose. She had resisted the attack of two armed men with her dark, thick, bare hands. She had shouted both her lungs out not giving in to death-pain. She had clang on to life in the face of the thirty-six consecutive blows. And finally…

Friday, September 4, 2009

Friday, July 10, 2009

I will stand in the rain someday. Drenched more than the pigeons crouching down for shelter. My hair, wet like wriggly snakes. The rain will dance along my naked arms and sliding through my fingers, will wash my feet. My dust-worn choti. My nails chapped with everyday monotony.

I will feel the rain along my body, tender like a lover’s touch. Let it soak into my T-shirt. Let hints of underwear appear starker than hidden tortures. Let my blue skirt fly in the wind making unwanted, forbidden, obscene revelations. Let all tears flood away into the puddle-pools. With water. With sweat. With phlegm. With menstrual blood. Let all bonds liquefy… flow away… evaporate…

I will dance in the rain someday. Wilder than frogs. Stranger than dreams. I will let my chunri go.I will sing in the rain someday.Alone.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

I can’t take it anymore. I can’t. How can one tolerate denial of breath for three years in a row? I know I still exist and there might be many millions of people who are in a worse condition than mine. But I’ll still cry. I’ll still shout until I’m hoarse. I’ll still bite the tail of my ball-pen while writing to you. I need a yell, believe me. I badly do. Everybody is a stranger here and I am stranded among a lost world. Did I dream for this day? Did 'we' dream for this day? It’s not disillusionment. It’s death. I die every moment among these people… these people who are the elite femme intellectuals of our city. They talk Neruda. They eat bhutta. They drink anything from unending cups of tea to gin with lime or vodka. They dream in nostalgic fumes of Charminar. Yet I can feel their realities. Unfortunate, but true, I easily can. Very precisely. Do want to know?

They are dolls. Highly fashionable and somewhat pretty dolls. They care more for manicure than for poetry. They might talk about Neruda, but in sleep, all dream of Eric Segal. They prefer McDonald’s hot-dogs much more to bhutta only if they had been cheaper and more in vogue!!! They like to fret over extremely silly and at times irritatingly nyaka love affairs, not to mention the teenage crap about ‘crushes’. They go through the T2 page of The Telegraph with better attention than class notes. They merely need an excuse to switch on from discussing poetics to bitching about friends, relatives and neighbors, a topic they feel more at ease with, of course. No matter how much bangali their PNPC is, they regard Bengali culture as shit and consider people singing Bengali polli-geeti or the likes (and not MLTR or Backstreet Boys) as uncultured and illiterate tribals. They adore anything Western as sophistication and shun anything Bengali as crudeness. No, I don’t have any objection. I adore different kinds. They add spice to the boredom called life. The problem lies in the fact that they cannot tolerate or accommodate people who admire things that they don’t and not those that they do. Nor are they prepared to accept their true selves, their realities. They love to suffer from the voluntary illusion that they are superior in all possible ways from those who do not accept this idea to be true or those who don't not follow their ways. From the very first week in college, I’ve been marginalized as the girl who is darkly mysterious. Why? Because I dare to live life my way. I don’t go to a parlor except for haircuts. I have a close-cropped and extremely short hairstyle in order to allow my neck proper ventilation. I prefer T-Shirts to balloon-tops. I believe looking beautiful in my mirror instead of in the mirror of their eyes. I don’t have a boyfriend. And my best friend without whom life would have been hell is another girl.

It amazes me. It thrills me. It sends a shiver down my spine. Is this the elite? Is this the intelligentsia? Is this the cream? If this is it, I admit, I feel nauseated. There was a time when I used to laugh at them in the same way we all laugh at Belinda as she mourns the loss of her lock. I felt pity and mirth and blinked with mercy towards their fetish for ‘normality’… their crazy desire to be appreciated by the male gaze and vehement denial of its appropriating side-effects… their whispers about attraction and sex under the common name of 'love'… their binary world of the good and the bad… their extreme yet unquenched curiosity about my ‘world’ to which I straightly denied them any access… their taboo of homosexuality… their water-tight definitions of relationships… everything…

But no. Not still. I’ve had enough. I need a break. I need a holiday- a holiday from which I will no longer need to return. I want some sleep. A college filled with falsities and biases repels me to no extent. I refuse to respect an institution that cannot trust its students with maintaining decency and following proper discipline. Is there any other college in this city that subjects its female students to a ‘dressing-code’? Are we kids, rowdy and untamable, waiting for any moment of slackness from the authority in order to bring out our inherent animosity and ruin the name of the college? If the authority believes so, let me announce, it cannot control it with a thousand dress codes and disciplinary measures. We all will break out as far as we can. And when time for release from this Foucaultan space will come, when fear of expulsion or punishment that now constantly hovers around us will subside, I’ll ensure that people henceforth give a second thought before admitting themselves to a college where most of the colleagues are intolerant, silly, lacking any substance and where the authorities leave no opportunity of exercising dictatorial anarchy in the name of order and discipline.

All I did all these years is pray. I prayed desperately. And regularly. Otherwise I would have lost my sanity from this constant attempt to maintain minimum society in college. And of course, the teaching helped. Teachers of our department are the only positive light that saved me from falling into the bottomless pit of acute depression. And there was my family. My not-so-intolerant friends, who can accept, understand and appreciate me in the way I am. And you. If there is still life, it’s because you people still exist. Thank you for being with me. Thank you for being the way you are.

I’ll have to end my letter here. Our end-semester exams are drawing close. I need to study a hell lot of things, not to mention the mugging up. It’s too lonely out here… this me and my books… but then, it is probably my ‘shadow line’ phase as Conrad calls it, eh?

Wish me luck and see you as soon as my exam ends.Love,Me.

[This Letter is a dedication to Poushali, my friend, philosopher and guide, who is indeed undergoing a 'twilight' phase in her life.]

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The apartment in which I live has this custom of holding meetings on the 1st Sundays of every month. This being a common holiday, no one can deny responsibility of attending those meetings on the excuse of being unavailable because of their office. But this month is special. An emergency meeting has been called today, in the 15th of March, all of a sudden. This meeting is to decide the fate of our apartment’s security and to assign certain minor responsibilities (such as switching on/off the water pump in turns etc) on the inmates.

What caused the emergency?

Our caretaker Chintoo has been caught red-handed sleeping with Mrs. Roy’s maidservant. The furtive glances of Chintoo and Shikha (as the maid is called) had caused suspicion long ago. But they couldn’t have been accused directly owing to the lack of clear-cut evidences. But a couple of days ago, my morning sleep was cut short at 8am by roars, growls and snarls of the inhabitants of the apartment. Before long I realized that those were supposed to be sounds of victory for their now proved suspicions that were previously ignored. By the time I went down, Shikha had fled and Chintoo was begging for mercy at the feet of his masters. He was refused, of course. Mr. Dasgupta dragged his baggage down the stairs from his attic room and flung them onto the streets. The whole para gathered to catch the fun with facades of paramount concern and passing judgments went on and on and on and on and on…

Too much noise and too much non-sense always send me into reveries of distraction. So I’m not pretty sure whether I heard every abuse that was used to adorn Chintoo and Shikha. But the reasons of the abuse were such attractive that I gained back my conscious self once again.

The primary catastrophe, of course, is that adultery had been going on for more than a month in our own apartment and that our own caretaker was its chief culprit. However this allegation soon shifted over from Chintoo to Shikha and you can well imagine what followed, yes, what follows all the time, that is. Shikha is a married woman of about 28-30 years of age. She has a 10-year-old son. It is known from certain god-knows-what sources that she left her husband, her child’s father soon after her son was born and went to live with her brother-in-law with whom she had been having an affair for long. So, she is an old horse, actually. Familiar with various kinds of meadows. Naturally, sympathy started gathering on Chintoo’s side and a few of the flat members even repented for throwing him out. The more pity showered for Chintoo, the more aggressive did the public become towards Shikha. She was accused of provoking 22-year-old innocent Chintoo into immoral sexual activities by her titillating dressing sense. She was accused of being attractive. She was accused of doing her eyebrows. She was accused of using pink lipstick. She was accused of showing her cleavage occasionally. She was accused of having taken advantage of Chintoo’s youthful slips. She was accused of seducing men at every chance. She was accused of being shrewd and manipulative. All this continued for about an hour or so at the end of which everybody came to decide that she was a whore and that it was impossible for young, unmarried Chintoo to resist the constant temptation.

In the whole process of abuse and decisions the fact that Chintoo was a drunkard, which could leave our apartment open to intrusions during his tipsy hours, escaped notice. Got drowned totally. May be because drinking is much less of a moral sin than adultery. Or may be, because everyone was too keen to get Chintoo back to run on their ever-going-on errands. He was cheap. And he was available. Finally it didn’t matter with whom he slept. All what mattered is whether he can take the responsibility that would be assigned to us otherwise. We are essentially responsibility shirkers. Even the moral police fall flat on this ground. Wonder!!

Today, the meeting has been called in order to decide whether Chintoo would be re-admitted to the job or whether his brother Rintoo would take his place. Let’s see what happens. I really never am able to judge anything complex properly… but then, all claim that this case is pretty easy.

As for Shikha, I have no idea where she has gone. But I guess, her search has begun again. She has reached such a point, where men did not matter without their bodies… be it her husband… her brother-in-law… Chintoo… or…Whatever!